ABSTRACT
River red gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) is the dominant floodplain tree of the River Murray in south-eastern Australia. Drought and over-allocation of water have seen tree condition decline and environmental water is being used to aid recovery. An eight-variable visual assessment method is widely used to assess river red gum condition. These variables have been combined into a single aggregated index, the Red gum Condition Index (RCI), which comprises the Crown Condition sub-index (CCsi), which contributes 60% of the final score and assesses the amount of foliage in the tree crown; and the Secondary Variable sub-index (SVsi) which contributes 40% of the final score and aggregates measures of new tip growth, epicormic growth, reproduction, leaf die-off, mistletoe and bark condition. Relationships between variables define six condition categories. The R software package RCI calculates the RCI and provides quantitative and graphical outputs. Applied to two sites in South Australia, the RCI detected changes in tree condition attributable to environmental watering. As a responsive index with transparent categories the RCI can measure the current condition of river red gum stands and assess their watering needs. The RCI approach is readily transferrable to other tree species.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Melissa White, Mark Walter, Todd Wallace, Mark Schulz and Erin Lennon who assessed the trees used in the analysis. Karl Hillyard, Helen Regan and Kerri Muller provided constructive comments on drafts of this paper and the South Australian Department for Environment and Water supplied the data.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.